Using rigorous methodologies, Institutional and Organizational Economics focuses on the theoretical and empirical analysis of institutions, organizations and contracts, as well as on the conditions under which these arrangements emerge and evolve.
Ph.D. students, Post-docs and researchers, in Economics, Management, Political Science, Sociology, Law and other social sciences.
Formal lectures will be given every morning. Each lecture is dedicated to the extensive presentation of the state of the art of the discipline on a specific applied or theoretical topic. Afternoons will be dedicated to workshops devoted either to research questions or methodologies. Seminars, held in the second part of the afternoon, allow the participants to have their work discussed by recognized scholars in the field.
Morten Bennedsen (U. Copenhagen), Elisabeth Clemens (U. Chicago), Cary Coglianese (Penn Carey Law), Ricardo Dahis (Monash U.), Benjamin Marx (Boston U.), Simon Porcher (Paris Dauphine-PSL U.), Jens Prüfer (Tilburg University & University of East Anglia), Jan Aart Scholte (Leiden U.), Brian Wu (U. Michigan), Giorgio Zanarone (University of Lausanne).
Alan Benson (U. Minnesota), Joseph Emmens (Barcelona School of Economics), Álvaro La Parra-Pérez (Weber State U.), François Libois (Paris School of Economics), Lizhi Liu (Georgetown U.), Catherine Magelssen (London Business School), Daniela Scur (Cornell U.), Arthur Silve (Laval U.), Timothy Yeung (CEPS), Guanchi Zhang (Vermont Law and Graduate School).
Eric Brousseau (University Paris-Dauphine - PSL)
Attendants will be selected on the basis of their resume, and of a paper or of a presentation of their research program.
There are three deadlines for applications. As capacity is limited, we recommend that you do not wait until the last date to apply in order to have the best chance of being accepted.